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Dollar climbs to one-week high as Gulf tensions flare

Dollar climbs to one-week high as Gulf tensions flare

By Jiaxing LiThu, May 28, 2026 at 6:26 AM UTC

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Banknotes of Japanese yen and U.S. dollar are seen in this illustration picture taken September 23, 2022. REUTERS/Florence Lo/Illustration

By Jiaxing Li

HONG KONG, May 28 (Reuters) - The dollar firmed to a one-week high on Thursday as a fresh exchange of airstrikes between Iran and the U.S. dented hopes for a ‌peace deal, while the yen softened towards a level that triggered central bank intervention last month.

Iran's ‌Revolutionary Guards said on Thursday it targeted a U.S. airbase after the U.S. military carried out what a Washington official said were ​strikes aimed at an Iranian drone operation near the Strait of Hormuz, hours after President Donald Trump rejected a report he was close to a compromise deal with Tehran.

Oil prices rebounded and the safe-haven dollar steadied as hopes of a swift resolution to the war faded, with investors now increasingly expecting the greenback to break higher as ‌the Federal Reserve shifts its focus ⁠to battling inflation amid elevated energy prices.

"The situation in the Middle East remains very fickle, very murky," said Aidan Yao, senior investment strategist for Asia at Amundi Investment Institute.

"There ⁠is still a lot of uncertainty as to how much progress we have made in reaching a potential deal," he said, adding Amundi expects oil prices to hover around $100 a barrel on average over the second quarter.

The euro was ​0.2% lower ​at $1.1601, while the pound was down nearly 0.3% at $1.3387.

The ​risk-sensitive Australian dollar weakened 0.3% to $0.7120, a one-week ‌low, and the New Zealand dollar was down 0.4% at $0.5876.

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The dollar index, which measures the greenback's strength against a basket of six major peers, strengthened 0.13% to 99.426, near its highest level since May 21.

Cryptocurrencies also slid as risk sentiment took a hit. Bitcoin was last traded 3% lower at $72,878.72, while ether was down 4.2% at $1,974.68.

Markets will now look ahead to today's release of the Fed's preferred inflation gauge, the core PCE deflator, ‌which will help shape the broader interest rate outlook.

The yen ​weakened to as far as 159.610 per dollar on Thursday, the ​lowest since April 30 and within sight of ​the 160 level that triggered intervention by Japanese authorities last month.

That intervention bought policymakers ‌some breathing room, but questions linger over its ​lasting impact, said Tony Sycamore, ​market analyst at IG.

"The broader question is whether it was worth it for what essentially amounts to just a single month's relief. And furthermore, will authorities have the stomach to write a similar-sized ​cheque if the 160 level is ‌breached again in the coming sessions?" he said.

Markets are pricing a roughly 70% chance of a ​quarter-point interest rate rise at the BOJ's June 15–16 policy meeting, LSEG data showed.

(Reporting by ​Jiaxing Li; Editing by John Mair and Muralikumar Anantharaman)

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Source: “AOL Money”

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